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Steve Pretty On The Origin of the Pieces
Steve Pretty
35 episodes
1 week ago

‘Wide-ranging and insightful’ - Guardian (pick of the week, January 2024)


A show for anyone who has ever listened to, played, improvised, written, or just enjoyed music and wanted to know more about these mysterious sounds. Are they 'auditory cheesecake' as cognitive scientist Steven Pinker claims, or actually a fundamental part of what has made us into modern humans?


With an enormous variety of guests ranging from well-known musicians, producers and industry figures through to those for whom music is central but who rarely have a voice, this show is unapologetically broad in scope.


In 'entertaining noises', Steve has musicians explain and demonstrate their instrument, giving fresh perspective on everything from the piano to modular synthesizers, via lesser-known folk instruments from around the world.


And in the flagship 'genre tombola' section, Steve is assigned a randomly-chosen genre from the list of 1334 music genres on Wikipedia, which he then goes away and researches, often talking to an expert in that music, before frequently attempting to make some music in that style... Whether he succeeds or not, there's lots of fascinating stuff to learn along the way!


As fun as it is thoughtful, this show aims to help you hear and appreciate music in new ways.


http://www.originofthepieces.com/


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Music Commentary
Education,
Music,
Self-Improvement,
Music History
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All content for Steve Pretty On The Origin of the Pieces is the property of Steve Pretty and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

‘Wide-ranging and insightful’ - Guardian (pick of the week, January 2024)


A show for anyone who has ever listened to, played, improvised, written, or just enjoyed music and wanted to know more about these mysterious sounds. Are they 'auditory cheesecake' as cognitive scientist Steven Pinker claims, or actually a fundamental part of what has made us into modern humans?


With an enormous variety of guests ranging from well-known musicians, producers and industry figures through to those for whom music is central but who rarely have a voice, this show is unapologetically broad in scope.


In 'entertaining noises', Steve has musicians explain and demonstrate their instrument, giving fresh perspective on everything from the piano to modular synthesizers, via lesser-known folk instruments from around the world.


And in the flagship 'genre tombola' section, Steve is assigned a randomly-chosen genre from the list of 1334 music genres on Wikipedia, which he then goes away and researches, often talking to an expert in that music, before frequently attempting to make some music in that style... Whether he succeeds or not, there's lots of fascinating stuff to learn along the way!


As fun as it is thoughtful, this show aims to help you hear and appreciate music in new ways.


http://www.originofthepieces.com/


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Music Commentary
Education,
Music,
Self-Improvement,
Music History
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Earwax, Echoes and Entropy
Steve Pretty On The Origin of the Pieces
57 minutes 22 seconds
1 month ago
Earwax, Echoes and Entropy

What can a lump of whale earwax tell us about human history?

What does the end of the universe sound like?

And how do you play the sea like a synthesiser?


This episode of Steve Pretty On The Origin of the Pieces goes from marine mammal physiology to cosmological heat death, taking in hydrophones, cultural transmission in humpbacks, the physics of underwater sound, and an improvised trumpet elegy for the end of everything.


My guests are:


  • Chris Lintott – astrophysicist, broadcaster, and co‑host of The Sky at Night. We open with a live extract from our Universe of Music show, performed at Gresham College — exploring what sound and music can tell us about the ultimate fate of the cosmos.
  • Richard Sabin – whale expert and lead curator of mammals at the Natural History Museum, who shares sonic insights from the deep — including how 150 years of whale earwax is helping scientists track stress in marine life.


We also:


  • Hear vintage 78 rpm whale recordings, played on a £60k system at Audio Gold
  • Use filters to “play the sea” like a scale
  • Drop a hydrophone into a water tank and see how sound behaves
  • Discuss echolocation, underwater acoustic pollution, and whale “culture”
  • Recreate underwater acoustic effects via processing and pitch shifting
  • Reflect on what it means to really listen — to whales or the cosmos


Recorded live at the brilliant First Light Festival in a sweltering tent by the sea (thanks again to them for hosting us).



🧠 Bonus content


🎥 The full, uncut interview with Richard Sabin — including audience Q&A and extended hydrophone demos — is available on Patreon.






👯 Mentioned in this episode


  • Sonic Collaborations – project by Colin Riley & team
  • Audio Gold – London hi‑fi / vinyl emporium
  • Natural History Museum
  • First Light Festival
  • Chris Lintott




💌 How to support the show


  • Join the mailing list: www.originofthepieces.com
  • Become a patron: patreon.com/StevePrettyOnTheOriginofthePieces
  • Share with a musically curious friend
  • Rate & review on Apple or Spotify — it genuinely helps 🎧

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Steve Pretty On The Origin of the Pieces

‘Wide-ranging and insightful’ - Guardian (pick of the week, January 2024)


A show for anyone who has ever listened to, played, improvised, written, or just enjoyed music and wanted to know more about these mysterious sounds. Are they 'auditory cheesecake' as cognitive scientist Steven Pinker claims, or actually a fundamental part of what has made us into modern humans?


With an enormous variety of guests ranging from well-known musicians, producers and industry figures through to those for whom music is central but who rarely have a voice, this show is unapologetically broad in scope.


In 'entertaining noises', Steve has musicians explain and demonstrate their instrument, giving fresh perspective on everything from the piano to modular synthesizers, via lesser-known folk instruments from around the world.


And in the flagship 'genre tombola' section, Steve is assigned a randomly-chosen genre from the list of 1334 music genres on Wikipedia, which he then goes away and researches, often talking to an expert in that music, before frequently attempting to make some music in that style... Whether he succeeds or not, there's lots of fascinating stuff to learn along the way!


As fun as it is thoughtful, this show aims to help you hear and appreciate music in new ways.


http://www.originofthepieces.com/


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.